• Recent
    • Unsolved
    • Tags
    • Popular
    • Users
    • Groups
    • Search
    • Register
    • Login

    fog pxe/iPxe boot win 7 wimboot CD/DVD missing issue

    Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved
    Windows Problems
    4
    27
    13.3k
    Loading More Posts
    • Oldest to Newest
    • Newest to Oldest
    • Most Votes
    Reply
    • Reply as topic
    Log in to reply
    This topic has been deleted. Only users with topic management privileges can see it.
    • george1421G
      george1421 Moderator @KnightRaven
      last edited by george1421

      @KnightRaven Success!!

      OK I executed the plan I outlined and created the ISO. I build the iso on my Win7 MDT server so it used WAIK 6 (I think). It is what ever version of waik for Win7. I tried initially to create it on our Win10 MDT server and the file paths were too different. Everything was there but I decided to do on Win7 WAIK just to stick to the plan. Once I had the ISO image I moved it to the FOG server into the /var/www/html/fog/iso folder. I checked to make sure the file was world readable in linux. In the FOG management gui (1.2.0 trunk build) I went to the fog configuration and added a new ipxe boot menu with these properties.

      Menu Item: winpe7a
      Description: WinPE tester
      Parameters:
      initrd http://<ip_addr_fog_server>/fog/iso/winpe_amd64.iso
      chain memdisk iso raw
      Menu Show with: All Hosts

      On my windows file server (pointed to in the startnet.cmd file (net use z: \<server_name><share_name> /user:<uid> <pass>) I created a share and copied the entire content of the Win7 Pro DVD into that directory. I then made the directory permissions everyone:read and the share everyone:read.

      Finally I pxe booted my test VM and selected the “WinPE tester” menu. The vm booted into winpe, connected to the z: drive and ran the setup program. I clicked through the setup program until it install the windows files and then began extracting the files. That is where I stopped the VM and aborted the test because it was working.

      Please help us build the FOG community with everyone involved. It's not just about coding - way more we need people to test things, update documentation and most importantly work on uniting the community of people enjoying and working on FOG!

      KnightRavenK 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • KnightRavenK
        KnightRaven @george1421
        last edited by

        @george1421
        good to know it was tested all the way through and worked. So I will remake may boot.wim file and sources, and make a bootable .iso from it and see what happens.

        The current ISOs I have are too big. The PCs need more ram to support the full bootable ISOs as opposed to the win_pe versions.

        Thanks for testing. I will report back when I get a chance to try it out.

        A wise man knows he can always grow wiser.

        99 little bugs in the code, 99 little bugs
        Fix one bug, save it again…
        101 little bugs in the code

        george1421G 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
        • george1421G
          george1421 Moderator @KnightRaven
          last edited by

          @KnightRaven Just for info, the winpe iso I created was about 270MB in size. So 1GB of RAM memory should be enough for both the winpe ram disk and the setup installer to run.

          Please help us build the FOG community with everyone involved. It's not just about coding - way more we need people to test things, update documentation and most importantly work on uniting the community of people enjoying and working on FOG!

          KnightRavenK 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • KnightRavenK
            KnightRaven @george1421
            last edited by

            @george1421
            So I took the time and tested. IT Worked! I don’t know if the difference is running the driver pack you listed(injecting it). Or running it as an ISO as opposed to the individual files. But at least I have a working concept. I have to go back and edit my startup cmd file. I didn’t put the full user context(<pcname\userid>) when mapping my share.

            I don’t know if its an added driver or the fact that this time the default setup never ran. Just the one from the share.

            The next trick will be seeing if I can get it to work on an HP laptop. If it’s a driver issue that is.
            I am excited that there is a working model to go from though.
            Thank you very much for all of y’alls time!

            Jason

            A wise man knows he can always grow wiser.

            99 little bugs in the code, 99 little bugs
            Fix one bug, save it again…
            101 little bugs in the code

            george1421G 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • george1421G
              george1421 Moderator @KnightRaven
              last edited by

              @KnightRaven Hey glad you got it worked out. I think HP had a similar WinPE driver pack. The one from dell does contain the drivers for all dell models. I would suspect that it will work 80% of the time for the hp systems too, since an intel or realtek nic is a nic no matter whos box it is in.

              I doubt its the wim/iso difference. I just use the iso because it is self contained (don’t need to mess with all of the ancillary files), plus I can burn it to cdrom, usb, pxe boot, or load it via esxi. So one image will work in all forms. Please report back on your successes and what you had to do to make the HP kit work. I think I’ll take the results from this tread and convert it to a tutorial. I know other have tried to do this too, I just didn’t have the time to work out the process before.

              Please help us build the FOG community with everyone involved. It's not just about coding - way more we need people to test things, update documentation and most importantly work on uniting the community of people enjoying and working on FOG!

              KnightRavenK 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • KnightRavenK
                KnightRaven @george1421
                last edited by

                @george1421
                So for that update. Yes HP has a winPE driver pack. Several depending on version needed. I tried booting the HP laptop with out injecting and it worked. So I may have just gotten lucky and the same drivers existed. Whatever the case I’m not complaining.

                It may be worth noting so there is no confusion(especialy in a more detailed tutorial) that the actual WinPE from the AIK appears to be needed. As opposed to using a boot.wim from regualr install media. It must point to a location that no longer exists(like USB/CD drives) causing setup to think it doesnt exist. Although an educated one, that is a completely wild guess.

                At any rate, rather it be drivers or a hard coded location of sorts, there is a difference in the WinPE boot environment and regular/Full boot environment.

                I’d be glad to offer help from my experiences if you write a tutorial. I was thinking of doing the same but my thoughts/writings can get off track sometimes.

                I really do appreciate your time and efforts.

                A wise man knows he can always grow wiser.

                99 little bugs in the code, 99 little bugs
                Fix one bug, save it again…
                101 little bugs in the code

                george1421G 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • george1421G
                  george1421 Moderator @KnightRaven
                  last edited by

                  @KnightRaven said:

                  It may be worth noting so there is no confusion(especialy in a more detailed tutorial) that the actual WinPE from the AIK appears to be needed. As opposed to using a boot.wim from regualr install media. It must point to a location that no longer exists(like USB/CD drives) causing setup to think it doesnt exist. Although an educated one, that is a completely wild guess.

                  Yes this is what I was saying (at least in my head) all along. You can not use the boot.wim from the install CD, but from WAIK instead. Maybe I need to put the required software in the tutorial too.

                  From the hardware / driver standpoint. The Dell driver pack is pretty good. That covers all of the dell line, which use common network and drive components. So it should work with the majority of other vendor’s devices. Now you may run into a one off situation. You can either remount the boot.wim you created and inject the driver or my preference is to rebuilt the boot.wim from the winpe.wim every time. We found that every time you mount and unmount the boot.wim it increases in size. Even if you open it and then close it right away without doing anything. So to keep the boot.wim the smallest possible recreate it each time you need to add drivers. If you create a batch script its easy to roll a new boot.wim file for each version.

                  Thank you for the feedback.

                  Please help us build the FOG community with everyone involved. It's not just about coding - way more we need people to test things, update documentation and most importantly work on uniting the community of people enjoying and working on FOG!

                  KnightRavenK 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • KnightRavenK
                    KnightRaven @george1421
                    last edited by

                    @george1421
                    Another potential tip… When booting into winpe this way, it asks you to press a key to boot from cd/etc. You can delete(or rename as i did) the bootfix.bin file in the ISO/boot directory. When saving and creating the bootable iso it will be able to boot without prompting.

                    A wise man knows he can always grow wiser.

                    99 little bugs in the code, 99 little bugs
                    Fix one bug, save it again…
                    101 little bugs in the code

                    george1421G 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                    • george1421G
                      george1421 Moderator @KnightRaven
                      last edited by

                      @KnightRaven Oh cool tip!! Will test and include for sure. Thank you.

                      Please help us build the FOG community with everyone involved. It's not just about coding - way more we need people to test things, update documentation and most importantly work on uniting the community of people enjoying and working on FOG!

                      KnightRavenK 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • KnightRavenK
                        KnightRaven @george1421
                        last edited by

                        @george1421
                        Just wanted to add some more notes after using/trying this setup in another location.
                        You may encounter rights issues and errors if nothing is changed. I opened up the File Browser as root to copy and paste files for Win setup along with other tools.

                        You very likely may need to use chown and chmod to give proper access to your files. By default on my testing the user and group was set to root:root. I did NOT use root as my user when mapping my drive for pxe setup. So I needed to change.

                        so you may need to try:

                        #to change who owns the folder or files
                        
                        sudo chown -R jdoe:root /location/of/folder
                        
                        # use a "*" wildcard to do all items at named location or at 
                        # current location
                        sudo chown -R jdoe:root /location/of/files/*
                        sudo chown -R jdoe:root *
                        
                        # you can use ls -l to check
                        
                        #for ref: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chown
                        
                        
                        #to change the actual rights, as in read/write/execute...
                        
                        sudo chmod 774 /location/of/folder/or files  (or again use a *)
                        
                        #again use ls -l to check
                        
                        
                        # 774 will give user and group full rights. the 4 gives guest read only.  Not sure that full rights are needed but used to test and didn't reduce as of yet to know if just read or anything less will work.
                        
                        for ref: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chmod
                        

                        To recap my trials…
                        At first I forgot to change user and mapped drive wouldn’t work. After changing user I would get access denied to setup.exe. After making sure I had rights to setup.exe, I got a winsetup.dll error. Saying it was corrupted or missing(Something like that I forget the actual wording now).

                        I ended up recopying to be sure but ended up being a rights issue to the whole sources directory.

                        Just wanted anyone else reading to know what you might run into. While I dont yet consider myself an expert here, I will be glad to answer questions if something is not clear. My knowledge has come from trial and errors, and then finally asking questions.
                        thanks to all who have helped answer or wrote other related topics to get me/us here.

                        Hope this helps someone.

                        Jason
                        KnightRaven

                        A wise man knows he can always grow wiser.

                        99 little bugs in the code, 99 little bugs
                        Fix one bug, save it again…
                        101 little bugs in the code

                        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                        • Q
                          Quazz Moderator
                          last edited by Quazz

                          @echo off
                          
                          rem The fileserver IP
                          set FILESERVER=192.168.1.155
                          
                          rem Share on the fileserver.
                          set SHARE=INSTALLERS\ISOFILES\0-WINPE
                          
                          rem Username for the share
                          set SHAREUSER=root
                          
                          rem Password for the share
                          set SHAREPASS=root
                          
                          rem amd64 or x86
                          set ARCH=amd64
                          
                          rem Path to hold working files. Needs about 500MB of free space.
                          set PEPATH="c:\winpe_%ARCH%"
                          
                          rem ##########################################################
                          rem     Don't edit anything below here
                          rem ##########################################################
                           
                          echo Creating the PE image
                          call copype.cmd %ARCH% %PEPATH% > NUL
                           
                          echo Mounting the image
                          dism /Mount-Wim /WimFile:%PEPATH%\media\sources\boot.wim /index:1 /MountDir:%PEPATH%\mount /quiet
                           
                          echo Adding commands to the startup script in PE
                          echo. >> %PEPATH%\mount\windows\system32\startnet.cmd
                          echo ping %FILESERVER% >> %PEPATH%\mount\windows\system32\startnet.cmd
                          echo net use z: \\%FILESERVER%\%SHARE% %SHAREPASS% /u:%FILESERVER%\%SHAREUSER% >> %PEPATH%\mount\windows\system32\startnet.cmd
                          echo z: >> %PEPATH%\mount\windows\system32\startnet.cmd
                          echo z:\64.bat >> %PEPATH%\mount\windows\system32\startnet.cmd
                           
                          echo Creating the pxeboot directory
                          mkdir %PEPATH%\pxeboot > NUL
                          mkdir %PEPATH%\pxeboot\Fonts > NUL
                          copy /y %PEPATH%\mount\windows\boot\Fonts\*.* %PEPATH%\pxeboot\Fonts\ > NUL
                          copy /y "%WinPERoot%\%ARCH%\Media\Boot\boot.sdi" %PEPATH%\pxeboot\ > NUL
                          copy /y "%WinPERoot%\%ARCH%\Media\Boot\BCD" %PEPATH%\pxeboot\ > NUL
                           
                          echo Unmounting the image
                          dism /unmount-Wim /MountDir:%PEPATH%\mount /Commit /quiet
                           
                          echo Optimizing the image
                          imagex /EXPORT %PEPATH%\media\sources\boot.wim 1 %PEPATH%\pxeboot\boot.wim > NUL
                           
                           
                          echo.
                          echo All the files you need for your PXE server are in: %PEPATH%\pxeboot\
                          

                          I use that batch file to easily create WinPE media for different Windows versions. It does require the imaging tools of the Windows Kits though, but I’m guessing most people will have that installed already.

                          You can add and remove certain commands as needed of course, for eg adding drivers using dism and such.

                          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                          • 1
                          • 2
                          • 2 / 2
                          • First post
                            Last post

                          194

                          Online

                          12.0k

                          Users

                          17.3k

                          Topics

                          155.2k

                          Posts
                          Copyright © 2012-2024 FOG Project